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From January 1874 to May 1875, Bessie and Sallie Earp
regularly paid the $10 monthly fines that were assessed
of prostitutes. In June 1874, based on a complaint
from one Samuel A. Martin, they were arrested and
charged with keeping a bawdy house, the location of
which turned out to be right behind Doc Black’s
hotel. It was in fact; suspiciously reminiscent of
the “temporary jail” that Wyatt said he
was incarcerated during the murder of one Charley
Sanders in May 27, 1874. But that’s another
story for later.
Bessie Earp was reputed to be the wife of Wyatt’s
brother James, who was employed as a bartender in
several saloons during the two years he spent in Wichita.
On a Civil War pension application, James claimed
to have married a woman named Nellie Bartlett Ketchurn,
familiarly known as Bessie, and she and James rolled
into Wichita the first week of September 1873, having
come from Ellsworth. She was 31 years old-James 33-
and it is improbable that she had no experience in
the oldest profession.
Bessie’s partner in crime, Sallie Earp, would
also have had experience, in spades. Recent research
makes it likely she was Sarah Haspel, from Peoria,
Ill. Twenty years old in 1874, she had been an inmate
of various brothels since at least age 15, and is
known to have been arrested on three occasions prior
to Wichita, twice in the company of Wyatt. Her acquaintance
with him probably dated from as early as 1868, when
evidence suggests he spent time in Peoria with his
cousin Dow Earp and brother Virgil and there formed
some sort of a relationship with a brothel-keeper
he’d met that year while grading the Union Pacific
track. It can hardly be a coincidence that the first
full month Wyatt served on the Wichita police force,
May 1875, Bessie, Sallie and other women using the
name Earp stopped paying monthly fines. This seems
to have been a professional courtesy extended to the
newly fledged officer, overlooked by everyone in city
government until Wyatt plunged himself into a mess
of trouble.
The election of 1876 saw William Smith attempting
to regain the position of city marshal. On the stump,
Smith made it a point of attack that Marshal Meagher,
if he were returned to office, would place Wyatt’s
brothers Morgan and Virgil on the force. Nepotism
was not particularly frowned upon in Wichita, so why
this should be a detriment is not clear, unless Smith
was appealing to gathering reform sentiment and making
a connection of the family to elements of vice, namely
Bessie and Sallie’s establishment. In this regard,
it is worthy of note that Morgan Earp was arrested
in the brothel of Ida May, the most infamous of Wichita’s
madams, some months before the election.
Whatever the provocation, Wyatt Earp went after Smith
with “fight on his brain,” as the Wichita
Beacon of April 5, 1876, put it, charging into a room
and pummeling Smith while he was holding a confab
with Meagher. Wyatt was arrested for violation of
the peace and fined $30, but even worse he was dismissed
from the police force. While Earp stewed in political
hot water, his accounts were scrutinized along with
Behrens, and he too was found to be in arrears. As
with Behrens’ pay Wyatt’s scrip was withheld
until he make up the shortfall in fines colleted.
This he never did, leaving Wichita by mid-May, as
the City Council decreed that the Vagrancy Act should
be enforced to evict the entire Earp family.
By the close of the 1876 season, Wichita was no
longer a cattle emporium. Grangers and their allies
pressured the Kansas Legislature to move the so-called
deadline to the west, placing the entire Arkansas
River valley out of bounds to Texas cattle. Nor did
Wichita need the herds any longer. An influx of farmers
spread over the rich grazing land where the herds
had roamed free, and Wichita became the mercantile
hub for his new base of consumers. By and large, the
gamblers, saloon men and prostitutes moved on to more
verdant territory, many to the latest incarnation
of the cattle town, Dodge City. There, Wyatt Earp
again became a lawman, adding to his laurels. Kate
Elder, who had walked the streets of Wichita under
the name Kate Earp, became a dance hall girl. There
would be repeated the dynamic of merchants-cattlemen-lawmen-sporting
class that had played out in Wichita, and once again,
for a brief while, the prostitutes, gamblers, saloon
men and their hangers-on, -the rough-scuff-would hold
sway.
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